[0001] The invention relates to electro-optical switching devices, and is an improvement
on the switching device disclosed in European patent application 80300480.3 (publication
number 0015139).
[0002] The device disclosed in that application switches light from one or more input light
guides to selected output light guides by the application of voltages to layers of
nematic liquid crystal between parallel-sided prisms causing them either to transmit
or totally reflect the light incident on the layers according to voltages applied
across the layers.
[0003] Such devices are sensitive to the polarization of the input light, and so are inherently
liable to substantial optical losses. The present invention provides an improvement
in these devices rendering them insensitive to the polarization of the input light
and so greatly reducing the light losses.
[0004] The invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic fragmentary cross-section through a liquid crystal layer
between a pair of prisms.
Figures 2A and 2B are diagrams showing the molecular orientation of a liquid crystal
layer under various conditions.
Figures 3 and 4 are diagrams of optical switching systems.
Figures 5 and 6A to 6D are diagrams explaining the principles of the present invention.
Figures 7, 8, 8A, 8B, 9, 9A and 10 are cross-sectional views of various further embodiments
of the invention.
[0005] The switching devices of the present invention, like those discussed in European
patent application 80300480.3, employ the electric field switching properties of thin
planar films of aligned liquid crystals in nematic media when disposed between cooperating
pairs of transparent bodies made of glass of a high index of refraction. The optical
refractive index n
g of the glass bodies or prisms 1 and 5 (Figure 1) is selected to be greater than the
ordinary refractive index n of the thin liquid crystal film 4. The value of n may
be equal to, slightly less than, or slightly greater than the extraordinary index
n of the liquid crystal medium of film 4. The opposed flat, polished surfaces of the
glass prism bodies 1, 5 at the interfaces with the liquid crystal film 4 may be supplied
with respective opposed thin optically-transparent, sputtered, electrically-conducting
layers 2, 3 preferably of indium-tin oxide prepared in the usual manner in thicknesses
of 200 to 300 Angstroms (20 to 30 nm). Thin films of other materials, including chromium,
have also been used to form electrodes in such liquid crystal display cells. Microgrooves
(not shown) may be formed in the conventional way on exposed surfaces of an insulator
material such as SiO or MgF
2 by 60° (1.047 radian) angle-deposition of 100 Angstroms (10 nm) of SiO or MgF
2 on the electrode films 2, 3 so as to enhance uniform homogeneous ordering of the
long liquid crystal molecules, especially for positive anisotropy liquid crystal materials,
in a preferred direction in the absence of the electric field V. Alternatively, a
small amount of a conventional surfactant material or a 500 Angstroms (50 nm) coating
of CaF
2 may be used to achieve the homeotropy desired in negative liquids. When a control
electric field V is applied between the conductive electrodes 2, 3, the effect of
the presence of the field in the liquid crystal medium is to re-order the long axes
of most of the liquid crystals, except for a negligibly small portion of the molecules
at surfaces of films 2, 3. The reorientation of the molecules causes the liquid crystal
film to present a new refractive index to the light of a typical light ray or beam
6.
[0006] Basically, the incoming collimated light beam 6, incident at an acute angle 0 at
electrode 2, is caused by the control signal V in the above- mentioned application
to be reflected as light beam 6a or to traverse liquid crystal film 4 as light beam
6b. The critical angle θ
c for total internal reflection of incident light beam 6 is governed by the ratio n
LC/n
g and depends both upon the applied field V and the optical polarization E
I or E
ll. If the optical incidence angle 9 is greater than θ
c (at V = 0), the incident beam is reflected as beam 6a; if not, the incident beam
penetrates the liquid crystal film 4, exiting via glass sheet 5 as beam 6b. Since
the thicknesses of films 2, 3, 4 are each very small, the actual deviation of the
exit beam 6b is also very small.
[0007] Operation of the arrangement of Figure 1 further depends upon the nature of the selected
liquid crystal material or composition, particularly depending upon whether it demonstrates
positive or negative dielectric anisotropy. In materials with positive dielectric
anisotropy, the long axes of the nematic fluid molecules generally align themselves
along the applied electric field. On the other hand, in materials with negative dielectric
anisotropy, the major portion of the long axes generally tend to dispose themselves
at right angles to theelectric field vector.
[0008] Figures 2A and 2B illustrate the preferred orientations of the long axes of the two
types of molecules as employed in the devices of the prior application. In particular,
Figure 2A illustrates the behaviour of liquid crystal molecules which display positive
dielectric anisotropy (E
ll-E
⊥> 0). Here, the ordering of the long axes of the liquid crystal molecules is homogeneous
and parallel to the planes of the electrode plates 2, 3 in the y direction in the
OFF STATE when the electric field is zero or, more properly, less than a threshold
voltage V
t. Raising V well above V produces the ON STATE with homeotropic ordering with the
long axes of the liquid crystal molecules perpendicular to the electrode plates 2,
3.
[0009] Figure 2B shows the opposite behaviour in the prior Soref devices of liquid crystal
molecules that display negative dielectric anisotropy (E<
//-E
⊥< 0). The ordering of the long axes of the liquid crystal molecules is homeotropic
and perpendicular to the planes of the electrode plates 2, 3 in the z direction in
the OFF STATE when the field is less than a threshold value V
t. Raising the voltage V well above the threshold value V achieves the ON STATE with
homogeneous ordering with the long axes of the molecules parallel to the planes of
electrodes 2, 3 in the y direction, an ordering direction depending, for example,
upon the 5
0 angle (0.087 radian) deposition of the CaF
2 film.
[0010] It will be noted in connection with Figure 1 that the incoming fibre light is usually
unpolarized light which may be resolved into orthogonal components: E
// in the plane of incidence (the transverse magnetic or TM mode) and E
⊥ perpendicular to the plane of incidence (the transverse electric or TE mode). For
positive dielectric anisotropy liquids, both the TE and TM mode waves are polarized
perpendicular to the molecular long optical axes when V< V (the OFF STATE) and both
modes are affected by the ordinary index of refraction no of the liquid crystal film.
Above the threshold V
t, the liquid crystal index which affects propagation of the TM mode component rises
significantly to n
e because light polarization for this mode is now approximately parallel to the nematic
optic axis. On the other hand, the TE mode component remains affected by no because
its polarization remains orthogonal to the nematic optic axis. In the case of negative
dielectric anisotropy, the TM mode light is affected by an index of refraction n
e in the low voltage state, while light in the TE mode is affected by an index of refraction
no. Then, for the ON STATE higher voltage, the refractive index becomes n for both
modes.
[0011] Figure 1 has been drawn for the case in which the acute angle 0 is slightly greater
than θ
c, or where:

[0012] For best results, n and n are made equal, though it may be shown that slight departures
from this equality of about two per cent produce only a fraction of a dB insertion
loss. Also to be considered are transmission losses from absorption in the electrode
films 2, 3 and from light scattered in the imperfectly ordered liquid crystal film
4; but these losses are small. Power reflected in practice is substantially ideal
for well-ordered liquid crystal materials, and transmission is close to ideal. These
general characteristics of the assembly of Figure 1 follow from its inherent characteristics
and are discussed in the aforementioned application and elsewhere.
[0013] Also discussed liberally in the literature and in the aforementioned application
is a wide variety of liquid crystal materials found useful by those skilled in the
art; practice of the present invention is accordingly not limited to the several examples
mentioned herein. For example, there are currently many commercially available nematic
liquid crystal mixtures that are insensitive to moisture and to other usual environmental
factors. Moreover, there are many stable liquid crystal compositions that have refractive
indices well suited for use in the present invention. Suitable liquids are those of
the field effect liquids, free from field-induced turbulence effects, including liquid
mixtures that have not been doped to accentuate dynamic scattering. Suitable high-index
glass prisms may readily be made from commercially available flint glasses or other
related widely available high index glasses.
THE PRIOR ART PROBLEMS
[0014] It will be apparent that electrooptic devices such as have just been described are
seriously polarization sensitive as will be seen from Figure 3, which is a more detailed
version representative of the apparatus of Figure 1. In Figure 3, the symmetric opposed
flint glass prisms 1, 5 (n is about 1.6) are spaced apart by continuous peripheral
hermetic seal 6 so that an active liquid crystal material may be enclosed in the volume
4. Indium-tin oxide electrodes 2, 3 are evaporated in opposed relation on the adjacent
faces of prisms 1, 5; these film electrodes 2, 3 are very thin, optically transparent,
and electrically conductive and form a cooperating electrode pair. It will be understood
that the thicknesses of films 2, 3 and of the liquid crystal medium are very small,
and that the drawing and those to follow have been deliberately drawn out of proportion
for the sake of clarity. For example, the pacing between electrodes 2, 3 may be only
5 microns. The volume 4 between the flint glass prisms 1, 5 and electrodes 2, 3 is
filled, for example, with a nematic field effect liquid crystal such as that known
as EM Laboratories type 1132 composed of phenyl and biphenyl cyclohexanes and having
a positive dielectric anisotropy of about 10.3 and an ordinary optical inde
". of about 1.49; the material is the product number 11878 of the EM Laboratories,
Elmsford, New York 10532. A layer of Si0 (not shown) may be placed on electrodes 2,
3 to define in a conventional manner the zero voltage ordering of the liquid crystal
molecules parallel to the electrode surfaces as shown for V< V in Figure 2A. Graded
index lenses such as lens system 8 serve as low loss couplers for light propagated
between prism 5, for instance, and a conventional multimode fibre optical wave guide
10d. In this manner, the light beam is always relatively well collimated as it passes
through the active liquid crystal medium in volume 4.
[0015] In Figure 3, when the liquid crystal has positive dielectric anisotropy and is aligned
in the zero voltage state as shown in Figure 2A, light entering the prism 1 from the
upper left fibre 10a along a light beam at the angle of incidence 0, and also polarized
parallel to the plane of incidence of the light, will be internally reflected by the
liquid crystal medium in volume 4 through the exit fibre wave guide 10b. The wave
guides 10a and 10b may conveniently be used as a main data bus so that the switch
may be characterised as fail safe because the coupling loss between guides 10a, 10b
is minimal in the zero voltage state. When a voltage (typically 10 to 50 volts) sufficiently
greater than a threshold voltage V of about one volt is applied between electrodes
2, 3, the liquid crystal molecules are realigned as in Figure 2A (V<V
t) so that they are perpendicular to electrodes 2, 3. Parallel polarized light entering
wave guide 10a is now transmitted through electrodes 2, 3 and the liquid crystal medium,
exiting through the wave guide fibre 10d. With this same molecular alignment, perpendicularly
polarized light entering wave guide 10a remains internally reflected, continuing to
exit via the upper right wave guide 10b.
[0016] Such operation is idealized; in practice a finite voltage V realigns the liquid crystal
molecules generally perpendicular to the surfaces of electrodes 2, 3, except for molecules
disposed in a boundary layer immediately adjacent the electrode surfaces. For the
latter, the alignment direction is dictated, not by the electric field, but by the
character of the surface layer associated with electrodes 2, 3. One consequence of
the inability to achieve total realignment of the molecules, including those in the
boundary layer, is that a small but finite amount of the parallel polarized light
(typically about five per cent) is still reflected into wave guide 10b. Moreover,
the electrodes 2,3 themselves absorb as much as one to five per cent of the light
incident upon them. As a result of all of these factors, about ninety per cent of
the parallel polarized light entering the switch from wave guide 10a (45 per cent
of the total) will reach the input of guide 10d. Fresnel reflection losses may cause
an additional one to two dB optical loss if not eliminated by anti-reflection coatings.
In propagation within a multimode fibre wave guide, light linearly polarized in one
plane is quickly converted to unpolarized light. Accordingly, it will be appreciated
that the prior art light switch of Figure 3, even under the most ideal of circumstances,
will not switch more than fifty per cent of an input unpolarized light beam from the
bus output guide 10b to a local terminal wave guide port 10d.
[0017] It will be understood that optical switching configurations in actual practice will
often not employ merely one switching unit such as that of Figure 3, but will use
pluralities of such units where its inherent problems may be multiplied. The switch
of Figure 3 may, for example, be used to connect an input bus optical guide to a light
detector and an output bus guide to a light source. Such a simple terminal system
could be used in a loop data link configuration wherein light travels only in one
direction, say clockwise, between all light sources and all light detectors. The device
of Figure 3, by virtue of its inherent inability to handle both light polarizations,
introduces additional 3 dB input and output coupling losses between two terminals
of a link, as well as connector losses. Accordingly, if additional of the Figure 3
units are introduced to collect or to transmit light with respect to either bus direction,
additional 3 dB loss factors arise. For example, the configuration of Figure 4 represents
an application of a pair of the unit switches of Figure 3 as a terminal in a half-duplex
bus using one fibre strand, the first switching unit 20 functioning exactly in the
same manner as the unit of Figure 3 when a control voltage is applied to terminals
17 of electrodes 2, 3 (not shown). The fibre optic wave guide port 10c of prism 5
is coupled to the input collimating lens 23 of prism 1 of switch 21, while the port
10d of switching unit 20 is coupled to the lens 24 of prism 5 of switch 21. The angled
face 19 of prism 1 of switch 21 is equipped with a conventional light source 27 with
electrical terminals 25; furthermore, the angled face 18 of prism 5 of switch 21 supports
a conventional optical energy detector unit 22 with electrical terminals 26. Electrodes
similar to electrodes 2, 3 of Figure 3 may be activated by electrical signals supplied
to leads 23.
[0018] In the structure of Figure 4, the second switching unit has been added to permit
light to be transmitted or received from either bus direction (10a to 10b or vice
versa). Aside from the aforementioned coupling losses, the addition of switch 21 injects
a total of about 10 dB input-output loss between the terminals 10a and 27 or 22 (or
between 10b and 27 or 22). While the ability to transmit and receive from both directions
provides versatility, a 3 dB penalty is necessarily introduced.
THE BASIC INVENTION
[0019] It will be understood that the present invention avoids the defects of the aforementioned
prior art, providing optical switching structures that function efficiently in a manner
independent of the polarization of the input light. Such may be accomplished, for
example, as shown in Figure 5 in a double-pass structure using a single layer of liquid
crystal, and using the same incidence and prism angles 0, but requiring longer prisms
31 and 37 and using, for example, extended electrodes 33 and 34. The extended prisms
and electrodes permit input light beams to intercept the liquid crystal layer between
electrodes 33, 34 at angle 0 in two symmetrically disposed locations 40, 41, each
beam undergoing reflection at the outer surfaces of the prisms at the symmetric locations
42, 43. As in Figure 3, only the barrier 35 is seen in cross-section in Figure 5,
the prisms and electrodes not having been sectioned as a matter of convenience in
keeping the drawings uncluttered. Again, the light beams are collimated and decollimated
by the cooperative action of graded index lenses such as at 32 and 38. Like the collimating
devices in Figures 3 and 4, the devices 32, 38, et cetera, of Figure 5 may take various
forms, though a preferred device is an arrangement in which a collimating or decollimating
fibre optic guide element may itself be inserted in a conventional way into a plug
or fitting affixed to the associated prism face. By creating and by collecting quasi-collimated
light, the collimating- decollimating elements have a beneficial effect in providing
lower cross-talk in the switching array. Such devices are described in the literature,
including U.S. patent 3 894 789 to Kobayashi et al. The selected lens preferably has
three features for use in the present invention: the lens length is exactly a fourth
of the wave guide pitch so as to image the fibre core source at infinity, the lens
numerical aperture is greater than the fibre core numerical aperture, and the lens
outside diameter must exceed the fibre cladding diameter. Also of interest are the
arrangements of the Holzman U.S. patent 4 119 362 and of the paper "Microlenses for
Coupling Junction Lasers to Optical Fibres", Applied Optics, January 1974, page 89,
by L.G. Cohen et al. Other conventional devices may be employed, such as those that
may be purchased under the trade name Selfoc from the Nippon Sheet Glass Company,
3 New England Executive Park, Burlington, Massachusetts, by specifying, for example,
product SLW with L = 5.2 mm. = 0.25p, diameter = 2mm., and N.A. = 0.50.
[0020] In Figure 5, it is assumed that the V<V
t state holds the liquid crystal molecule along axes parallel to the electrodes 33,
34, as in the left part of Figure 2A. In Figures 5, if V>> V
t, light flowing into port 30 and having both parallel and perpendicular plane polarized
components will be divided at point 40, the perpendicularly polarized part being reflected
at 40 while the parallel polarized part is transmitted through the liquid crystal
layer between electrodes 33, 34. Thus, the light beam from port 30, depending upon
its polarization state, internally reflects at the mirror surfaces 42 or 43 of the
respective prisms 31, 37 between liquid crystal light intercept points 40, 41. Ideas
of merit implicit in the Figure 5 structure are that the geometry uses only one liquid
crystal layer and the structure is easily manufactured using conventional techniques
such as are generally discussed in the aforementioned European application. Also,
assuming that the electric fields applied at both liquid crystal intersections 40
and 41 are the same at any one time, the polarizations of the light beams leaving
point 40 can be appropriately manipulated by introducing an element for changing the
polarization states of both upper and lower light beams between the interception points
40, 41, as at 42 and 43, respectively.
[0021] Without yet considering particular mechanisms for achieving the desired result, let
the result be considered with respect to Figure 5. For this purpose, assume that the
liquid crystal molecules are aligned parallel to electrodes 33, 34, as at the left
in Figure 2A, for V = 0; in this case, both pola -ization components -
L and 1/ entering guide 30 are internally reflected at intersections 40, 41 and light
entering guide 30 must exit only via the decollimating lens 32 and its associated
fibre optic guide. Similarly, light entering guide 36 must exit through lens 38. If
a voltage V>> V is applied to electrodes 33, 34 sufficient to realign the long axes
of the liquid crystal molecules perpendicular to electrodes 33, 34, parallel polarized
light is transmitted by the nematic layer and the perpendicularly polarized light
is reflected. Hence, unpolarized (or randomly polarized) light, as designated at input
fibre 30 by the symbols
//,
⊥, will be broken into its components. The perpendicularly polarized component j will
be reflected at 40, 42, and 41 into output lens 32. The parallel polarized component
II will be transmitted at its first intercept 40 with the liquid crystal medium into
output lens 32.
[0022] Now assume that as-yet undefined elements are located symmetrically at or near the
reflection points 42, 43, these elements being capable of converting parallel polarized
light into perpendicularly polarized light, and vice versa. Thus, while the beams
are propagating to the right in Figure 5, the polarization state in prism 31 is converted
to parallel as shown in the figure and that in prism 37 is converted to perpendicular.
In this manner, the parallel polarized components from the vicinity of point 42 are
transmitted through the second liquid crystal interface at point 41, while the perpendicularly
polarized light from 43 is reflected at 41, both components arriving at the output
lens 38. The net result is that substantially all of the incident unpolarized or randomly
polarized light entering by light guide 30 exits via the opposite output at collimating
lens 38, light which exited at port 32 when V = 0. Light entering guide 36 also exits
via output lens 32 when V>> Vt, independent of polarization. Hence, if each of the
polarization states may be changed between the liquid crystal intersections 40, 41,
an efficient, polarization-independent liquid crystal switch is generated.
[0023] One general method for obtaining the necessary change in polarization state can be
obtained according to the present invention by the strategic use of optical half wave
plates as generally illustrated in Figures 6A through 6D, each of which corresponds
generally to the structure shown in Figure 5, though only the prisms 31, 37 are shown
for simplicity, along with arrows indicating light paths. In Figures 6A, 6B, 6C, each
prism of the pairs 31, 37 is formed in two cooperating parts with optical half wave
plates interposed and cemented between those parts with a conventional transparent
medium. In Figure 6A, plates 50, 51 are a half wave thick in the direction of the
light rays traversing them and lie in a common plane. A mirror image of the structure
of Figure 6A may also be used. In Figure 6B, effective half wave sheets 52, 53 may
be placed in the respective prisms 31, 37 generally at right angles to the plane of
the liquid crystal layer. Again, a mirror image configuration may be used. There is
no limitation to the perpendicular arrangement of Figure 6B, since the half wave plates
54, 55 of Figure 6C may be arranged perpendicular to the incident light rays. A simpler
and therefore preferred form of the invention is shown in Figure 6D, in which the
necessary polarization conversion is achieved at the incidence points 42, 43 by affixing
at these points properly oriented thin quarter wave layers 56, 58 of birefrigent material
with cooperating mirrors 57, 59. The arrangement is evidently convenient, because
incorporation of elements in the interior of prisms 31, 37 is avoided.
[0024] The desired change in polarization state may be achieved without modifying prisms
31, 37 in the manner illustrated in Figure 7. The same liquid crystal orientation
is used throughout the volume of the liquid crystal medium; i.e., the crystal long
axes are parallel to the layer as at the left in Figure 2A for the V = 0 state. A
thin birefringent plate 70 is affixed to prism 31 at a location before the light incident
to input 30 reaches the intersection 40 and a transparent electrical electrode 71
is affixed thereto. Opposite electrode 71, a similar electrode is affixed to the surface
of prism 37 interfacing with the liquid crystal medium. The half wave plate 70 has
an index of refraction substantially equal to or higher than that of prisms 31, 37
and that of the liquid crystal medium for both light polarization states. At the intersection
41, a transparent electrode 73 is affixed to prism 31, while a half wave plate 75
is affixed to prism 37 and a cooperating transparent electrode 74 is attached thereto.
It is noted that plate 75 is disposed on the prism 37 that is opposite the prism 31
on which plate 70 is disposed.
[0025] Parallel polarized components of light entering prism 31 via guide 30 are converted
to perpendicular polarized light in half wave plate 70 and are therefore reflected
by the nematic material, whether or not a voltage is coupled across electrodes 71,
72. Upon reflection of the light, half wave plate 70 reconverts it into parallel polarized
light before flow toward point 42. The parallel polarized components are transmitted
at the second liquid crystal intersection 41 toward exit 38a if the liquid crystal
electrodes 73, 74 are excited with a voltage V>V
t, but will be reflected to 32a if the liquid crystal material is not excited. On the
other hand, perpendicularly polarized light entering input guide 30 is converted to
parallel polarized light by plate 70 then is reflected toward point 42 by the nematic
layer if it is electrically unexcited and is transmitted toward point 43 if the electric
field is present across the nematic layer. Moreover, when the parallel polarized light
is transmitted at the first liquid crystal interface 40, it is converted to perpendicularly
polarized light at the second half wave plate 75 and is reflected at the liquid crystal
intersection 41, reconverted to parallel polarized light, and therefore exits via
light guide 38a. Thus, it is seen that all light of both polarizations exits via output
32a if no electrical excitation is applied to the liquid crystal layer. Furthermore,
all such light exits via guide 38a when suitable excitation is applied to the liquid
crystal medium. In the same manner, light of any polarization entering guide 36 may
be selectively directed to output guides 32a or 38a. The reciprocity theorem applies
in such a manner that light entering either guide 32a or guide 38a may be selectively
directed to guides 30 or 36 according to the electric fields placed across the liquid
crystal.
[0026] A further embodiment of the invention is disclosed in Figure 8 which is attractive
because it uses fewer parts, is simpler, and is more economical to build than the
structures of Figures 6 or 7. This apparatus uses a novel, unconventional V = 0 alignment
shown in Figure 8A wherein the long axes of the liquid crystal molecules are perpendicular
to the drawing for V< V and are therefore also perpendicular to the direction seen
in Figures 2A, 2B. In other words, the long axes are perpendicular to the propagation
direction of the E and E beams and parallel to the glass prism substrates. Generally,
the structure of the Figure 8 apparatus is like that of previously described embodiments,
but electrodes 90, 91 extend only just so far as to apply an electric field across
the liquid crystal layer about the second light beam intersection 41. In this manner,
the axes of the molecules are always in a fixed state in the vicinity of intersection
40 (the perpendicular state, as indicated by dots) and no electrodes are required
there. The V = 0 orientation of the molecules at the intersection is indicated by
dots in Figure 8.
[0027] If unpolarized or randomly linearly polarized light enters prism 31 in Figure 8,
which is preferably a flint glass prism, the first liquid crystal intersection 40
always transmits perpendicularly polarized light components and always reflects parallel
polarized components, as illustrated in Figure 8A. The liquid crystal material at
intersection 40 therefore acts merely passively to separate the input light into beams
of the two orthogonal polarization states, one travelling toward reflection point
42 and the other toward reflection point 43. The reflection points 42, 43 produce
equi-angle incidence from opposite sides at point 41. In operation, when there is
no electric field applied between electrodes 90, 91 and the liquid crystals are therefore
aligned in the same manner throughout the liquid crystal volume, the liquid crystal
material about point 41 transmits perpendicularly polarized light into output wave
guide 32a; in addition, it reflects parallel polarized light when this liquid crystal
is unexcited also into output guide 32a. In other words, for no excitation voltage,
the perpendicularly polarized light is retransmitted and the parallel polarized components
are re-reflected at the second liquid crystal intersection 41 so that all of the light
flows out of wave guide 32a. If the liquid crystal material between electrodes 90,
91 is subjected to a field V>>V
t, the liquid crystal molecules there align perpendicular to the plane of the liquid
crystal layer and, as shown in Figure 8B, the opposite flow of light obtains; namely
parallel polarized light is transmitted and perpendicularly polarized light is reflected
in the vicinity of point 41. Hence, when the liquid crystal at 41 is electrically
excited, both polarizations exit collinearly via the output wave guide 38a.
[0028] It is observed that the high index prisms 31, 37 are long enough to accommodate two
passes of the light from input guide 30 (or 36) through the liquid c-ystal layer,
as well as two totally reflective intersections 42, 43 at outer surfaces of prisms
31, 37, respectively. The prisms 31, 37 have a refractive index n that satisfies the
relation n 0< n
g<n
e, where no and n are the respective ordinary and extraordinary indices of refraction
of the liquid crystal medium. The obliquely incident light beam from guide 30 of Figure
8 (θ = 67° or 1.17 radians typically) consists of parallel and perpendicular components.
The liquid crystal presents different indices to these polarizations; i.e.; n (
//, V
1) = no and n (
⊥, V
1) = n
e, where V
l<V
t' Recalling that the total internal reflection angle is:

[0029] It is then found, in a typical case, that θ (
// , V
1)≈65° or 1.13 radians, and that θ
c (
⊥, V
1) ≈84° or 1.47 radians. This means that the parallel light is totally reflected by
the liquid crystal medium at 40 (θ>θ
c (
//)), and that the perpendicularly polarized light is substantially totally transmitted
into the output port 32a (θ<θ
c(
⊥)) both for the condition V = 0. In the presence of a voltage V>>V
t across electrodes 90, 91, the effective refractive indices of the liquid crystal
become interchanged relative to the V = 0 state. In the V» V state, the parallel polarized
light is totally transmitted and the perpendicularly polarized light is totally reflected,
but now into the output port 38a. Similarly, unpolarized light entering port 36 is
totally sent to port 38a when V = 0 and totally into port 32a when V>> V
t. This means that the device is a true four-port optical reversing switch.
[0030] In one experimental model of the Figure 8 structure, the liquid crystal employed
was the previously mentioned E.M. Laboratories type 1132 nematic mixture with refractive
indices of n = 1.492 and n = 1.634 at λ = 643 nanometers. The polished prisms 31,
37 were made of optical glass of type WG 360 furnished by the Schott Glass Company,
400 York Avenue, Duryea, Pennsylvania 18642 and having an index of 1.644 at 643 nanometers.
Electrodes 90, 91 spaced five microns apart were made of 350 Angstrom (35 nm) thick
indium tin oxide with a sheet resistance of about 1000 ohms per square. The electrodes
90, 91 were then covered in the usual way, as well as the directly associated bare
glass surfaces of prisms 31, 37 (intersection 40), with a 200 Angstrom (20 nm) layer
of silicon monoxide, vacuum deposited at a 30° angle (0.52 radian) to the substrate
plane (the z - y incidence plane). In the figures, it will be understood that the
reflectivity of reflection points on the prism outer surfaces may be augmented by
adding metallic reflectors or mirrors at points 42, 43 and 98, 123, 124 of Figure
10.
[0031] It is desirable, as in the aforementioned European application to form matrix arrays
according to the present invention. For this purpose, it is particularly desirable
that the switch element be so constructed that, in the unexcited state of the liquid
crystal, the output light beam maintains substantially the same direction as its entrance
direction. The switching element of Figure 9 has this desirable property. It will
be seen that Figures 8 and 9 are very similar in nature; however, the ordering of
the liquid crystal molecular axes at the non-electroded area 40 in Figure 9 is vertical
rather than horizontal, the homeotropic ordering being produced by conventional surface
treatment. Accordingly, perpendicularly polarized light incident from 30 in Figure
9 at point 40 is reflected toward the reflection point 42, while parallel polarized
light E « is transmitted through the layer at point 40. In the electroded region 42,
the quiescent V = 0 ordering is horizontal with the molecular axes perpendicular to
the light beam propagation as indicated by dots in Figure 9. Note that it is quite
feasible to have two different liquid crystal alignments in the same switch volume.
As a consequence, E
L light is reflected at 42 and E
// light is reflected at 43. Now, if an electric field is applied across electrodes
90, 91, the molecular axes therebetween become vertical as in Figure 8B. . Consequently,
the parallel polarized light components are transmitted by the liquid crystal material
at point 41 toward output guide 32a. Furthermore, the perpendicularly polarized components
are reflected at 41 so that they, too, exit through the same output guide 32a. Both
polarizations exit collinearly through port 32a, which is desired for the ON state
of a cross point switch in a matrix; whereas, in the V = 0 unaddressed OFF state of
the switch, the unpolarized input light travels totally to output port 38a as is desired
in crossbar arrays. The structure shown in Figure 9 exhibits substantially no leakage
toward the cross ports when electrodes 90, 91 are unexcited and is therefore particularly
suitable for use in matrix switches.
MATRIX SWITCHES
[0032] The particular structures shown in Figures 7 through 9 have many applications in
themselves wherever it is desirable to switch substantially all of an incoming unpolarized
light beam between pairs of multimode optical fibre output wave guides in response
to selectively applied voltages with no adverse effects due to the unpolarized nature
of incoming light waves. Such low-loss, four-port optical reversing switches have
numerous applications, including applications inactive optical couplers, bypass switches,
and bistable logic devices. In addition, each switching element may be replicated
in a direction at right angles to the plane of the drawings of Figures 7 through 9,
as in the three-fold replicated example of Figure 9B, so that an elongated integrated
structure is produced for switching signals in an array of data busses by single or
by multiple control voltage sources. Each fibre in Figure 9B has its own independent
pair of control electrodes. Furthermore, the elemental switches may also be used in
matrix configurations to perform more sophisticated switching functions such as multi-pole
and crossbar matrix switching.
[0033] A matrix switch employing two liquid crystal layers and three prisms, two of which
are geometrically similar and using the principles of the present invention, is illustrated
in Figure 10. The two similar prisms 118, 120 are spaced apart with their similar
faces in proximity to form one liquid crystal layered volume additionally defined
by gasket 35a. A smaller prism 97 is spaced apart with its longer surface proximate
the shorter face of prism 118 to form a second liquid crystal volume additionally
defined by a peripheral gasket 35. The input ports 95, 96, 119 are associated, as
in the preceding figures, with respective input faces of the prisms 97, 118, 120;
while the output ports 99, 106, 125 are similarly butt-sealed to output faces of those
same prisms (the functions of the input and output faces may be interchanged). The
liquid crystal interface between prisms 97, 118 is provided with opposed transparent
electrodes 100, 102 at light beam intersection 101. A second intersection 104 in the
same liquid crystal layer employs similar transparent electrodes 103, 105. The long
axes of the molecules are selected to be perpendicular to the plane of the drawing
for V = 0 as in Figure 8A. Between the intersection points 101, 104 on the outer surface
of prism 97 is located a totally reflective surface or external mirror at 98.
[0034] Between the similar prisms 118, 120, three separated layered volumes are supplied.
The middle one of these, defined between barrier gaskets 113, 114 is a volume including
a light beam intersection 121, the layer volume being occupied by an inert or electrooptically
inactive transparent fluid whose optical index of refraction matches that of the adjacent
prisms 118, 120. Such liquids and mixtures of liquids are well known in the art and
may be formed in well known ways. A solid plate having similar optical properties
may be substituted if air voids are prevented. At light beam intersections 112, 117,
spaced equally on each side of the central intersection 121, are placed pairs of transparent
electrodes 110, 111 and 115, 116. On the outer surface of prism 120 is located a pair
of reflecting regions or mirrors at the respective points 123, 124.
[0035] The Figure 10 matrix switch represents a one hundred per cent transmission switch
with two spaced-apart liquid crystal layers defined by three simple glass prisms;
it is a limited three by three fibre optic matrix with four out of six matrix configurations
allowed and two forbidden. In the configuration of Figure 10, the four states illustrated
in Figures 10A to 10D represent the four possible one hundred per cent switching states
for unpolarized or random linear polarized light. The forbidden states are represented
in Figures 10E and 10F. As previously noted, this behaviour obtains with the long
axes of the molecules perpendicular to any one of the several electrode pairs when
V>> V for that pair and when the axes are perpendicular to the drawing when V<V
t.
[0036] The apparatus of Figure 11 represents an application of the invention in what may
be characterised as a 2 to N or N to 2 fibre optic switch using only three liquid
crystal layers and four glass prisms. With randomly polarized or unpolarized input
light at fibre optic guides 160 or 180, there is one hundred per cent switching with
respect to each of the six output port guides 161, 162, 163, 182, 183, and 195. The
structure is symmetrical about a central plane (horizontal in the drawing) and is
particularly characterised by the use of a liquid crystal at that plane of symmetry
displaying first characteristics and a liquid crystal material displaying second characteristics
for the two layers spaced apart on either side thereof.
[0037] Proceeding from the top of the figure, the first tier of the device includes a prism
151 having the usual angle light transfer faces, wave guide port 161 being mounted
upon one of those faces. The second tier of the device is formed by a somewhat larger
prism 159 also having similarly angled light transfer faces. Fibre optic wave guide
160 is fixed in abutted relation to one such angled face, while the opposite angled
face accommodates two similar wave guide ports 162, 163. A third tier employs a prism
181 similar to prism 159 but reversed so that its longitudinal face spaced from prism
159 has the same length as that of the prism 159 longitudinal face. Finally, a fourth
tier is formed by a prism 190 similar to prism 151 but again reversed with respect
thereto. The third tier prism 181 is equipped with a single input port 180 and a pair
of output ports 182, 183 in mirror image relation to the ports of prism 159. Like
prism 151, the corresponding prism 190 has a single port 195.
[0038] Between prisms 151 and 159, 159 and 181, 181 and 190 are disposed active layers generally
individually constituted as previously described and cooperating with strategically
positioned layered active liquid crystal materials between transparent electrodes
and with passive layered regions. In addition, the exterior longitudinal faces of
the two small prisms 151, 190 are respectively equipped with totally reflecting mirrors
or surfaces 150, 191, formed in the usual manner.
[0039] The interface layer between prisms 151, 159 is enclosed in the usual way by a peripheral
wall 35. A cooperating barrier 156a forms a region 155 at one end of the layer in
which is sealed an index-of-refraction matching liquid. In a centrally located part
164 of the layer are disposed two independent pairs 157 and 158 of transparent electrodes
for interaction with a first liquid crystal material. In this case, the liquid crystal
material at 164 is a nematic layer with homogeneous molecular orientation parallel
to the y coordinate (horizontal in the plane of the drawing) at V = 0; the liquid
is referred to hereinafter as the type A liquid and is a positive anisotropy material.
The liquid crystal material is retained in its layer by the barrier wall 156b, which
also functions to retain an index-matching material in the layer region 155 between
barrier 156b and the exterior wall 35. In this manner, two common electrically active
layered regions are defined disposed between two electrically inactive regions 155,
155.
[0040] The large interface layer at the plane of partial symmetry of the device in Figure
11 comprises one of a liquid crystal material contained within the peripheral wall
35a. This layer has four active regions with sets of independent transparent electrodes
175, 177, 178, and 179; the latter three pairs of electrodes are spaced widely apart
from the electrode pair 175. The material contained in the layered volume 176 is not
the same as that of layer portion 164, but is nematic liquid crystal with homogeneous
molecular long axis orientation parallel to the x axis at V = 0 and will be referred
to as a type B liquid. Again, a positive anisotropy liquid is selected. 0
[0041] The third interface layer, lying between prisms 181 and 190, is similar to that between
prisms 151, 159 differing mainly in using the same positive anisotropy type B nematic
material as is used in layer 176; i.e., a nematic material demonstrating homogeneous
orientation of the long crystal axes parallel to the x axis at V = 0. The liquid is
enclosed within a peripheral wall 35b. A cooperating inner barrier 185 forms a region
184 at one end of the layer in which is sealed an index-matching fluid. In a centrally
located part 189 of the layer are disposed two independent pairs 186, 187 of transparent
electrodes for interaction with the second liquid crystal material. The latter is
retained in region 189 by a second interior barrier 188, which also operates to retain
an index-matching material in the layer region 184 between barrier 188 and the exterior
wall 35a. Again, two common electrically active layered regions are defined about
location 189, disposed between the two electrically inactive regions 184, 184.
[0042] Using the principles taught in connection with Figures 1 through 9, it will be recognised
by those skilled in the art, for example, that an unpolarized or randomly polarized
light beam injected either into port 160 or into port 180 in Figure 11 may be directed
in its entirety, by selective excitation of cooperating electrode pairs 157, 158,
175, 177, 178, 179, 186, or 187, into any one of the opposed ports 161, 162, 163,
182, 183, or 195. In a similar manner, randomly polarized signals injected into ones
of the latter ports may be directed either to port 160 or to port 180. This may readily
be verified as is done in the typical example of Figure 11A, which illustrates one
particular set of ray paths through the matrix switch of Figure 11. In Figure 11A,
perpendicular and parallel polarized components of a light ray enter port 160. The
type B liquid with V = 0 at location 175' causes the parallel polarized component
to be reflected, while the perpendicularly polarized component is transmitted. Following
the reflected parallel component, it is reflected at locations 152', 153', and 154'
by mirror 150, having also been reflected by the two intersections at locations 157,
158 with type A liquid crystal material and V<V
t. Ultimately, the parallel polarized component beam reaches the type B location 179'
(V = 0) to be reflected into port 163.
[0043] Now, with respect to the perpendicular polarization component, it passes through
location 175', since type B material is used there and V = 0. That light ray is reflected
three times by mirror 191 and twice by type B nematic material between electrode pairs
186, 187 with V< V further to pass through location 179', joining the original parallel
polarized component coaxially at output port 163. Inspection of Figures 11, 11A will
give assurance that port 160 or 180 may readily be coupled to any one of ports 161,
162, 163, 182, 183, 195 (or vice versa). Referring only to operation with an input
at port 160, by way of example, light may be directed to any of the six output ports
by placing voltages V = 0 or V>> V
t on selected electrode pairs, as follows:

[0044] It will be seen that the program for directing and recombining the two polarized
light components entering the second input port 180 and separating almost at once
will be similar with the exception that the voltage V >> V will always be present
at the location 175' of electrodes 175.
[0045] Figure 12 represents a novel matrix form of the invention employing a building block
such as illustrated in Figure 9 wherein different treatments are given to prism surfaces
at different light beam intersections with liquid crystal layers. The structure, a
3 by 3 example of an N by N structure, is partially symmetric about the central liquid
crystal layer and each liquid crystal layer utilizes a plurality of the unit switch
cells of the aforementioned kind in a configuration desirably requiring no barriers
and no index-matching regions, the entire lengths of each layer being occupied by
liquid crystal fluid. The latter layers are set up between prisms 204, 205; 203, 204;
203, 230; 230, 246; and 246, 250. Prisms 205, 250; 204, 246; and 203, 230 are similarly
formed.
[0046] The upper tier prism has the usual angled end faces with fibre optic input end guides
202, 202a and a mirror element 208M at a mid-portion of upper surface. The liquid
crystal layer 211 defined within peripheral wall 35 includes two equal sized regions.
One, the region 197, is electrically undisturbable and is generated by the use of
appropriate surface treatment of the cooperating adjacent non-electroded surfaces
of glass prisms 204, 205. The other region has a transparent electrode pair 198E between
which the liquid crystals are oriented parallel to the prism surfaces along the X
direction of Figure 9 for V < V t. The passive region 197 has molecules oriented perpendicular
to the prism surfaces.
[0047] The second tier prism 204 includes external mirrors 207M and 221M on each side of
liquid crystal layer 211 which cooperate with mirrors 216M and 222M, respectively,
and has abutting fibre optic input and output guides 201, 214 at its opposite angled
faces. With the larger prism 203 and the peripheral wall 35a, it defines a second
liquid crystal layer 210 employing a single type of liquid crystal material and that
only. Beginning at the left end of layer 210, it includes an electrically undisturbable
region where the molecular axes remain vertical. Next is a region with a pair 199E
of transparent electrical electrodes and a pair of mirrors 212M both in a region where
the surface treatment of the layer causes the long axes of the molecules to be parallel
to the prism surfaces for V<V
t. Next, a second undisturbable region with molecular alignment perpendicular to the
prism surfaces appears. Finally, the layer includes a pair 213E of transparent electrodes
which, at V<Vt, again cause the parallel orientation of the molecular axes, as at
199E.
[0048] The third tier prism 203 includes external mirrors 206M 224M on each side of liquid
crystal layer 210 and has abutting fibre optic guides 200, 219 at its opposite angled
faces. With a similar, but inverted large prism 230, it defines a third liquid crystal
layer employing only a single type of liquid crystal material. Beginning at the left
end of layer 209, the layer 209 includes a region in which the molecular axes are
never disturbed from their perpendicular relation with respect to the adjacent prism
surfaces, a horizontal molecular axis region when V< V and defined between transparent
electrodes 215E and continuing between a pair 216M of opposed mirrors, an undisturbable
region, a second horizontal molecular axes region for V-< V defined between transparent
electrodes 217E, that region extending between a cooperating pair of mirrors 222M,
a third undisturbable region, and a final pair 218E of transparent electrodes defining
a region in which the molecular axes lie horizontally for V< V
t, all orientations being as illustrated in Figure 12.
[0049] In general, the fourth, fifth, and sixth tiers formed by the respective prisms 230,
246, 250 and the intervening liquid crystal layers 209, 240, 247 are mirror images
of the structure thus far discussed. In the figure, optical absorbers 220A, 244A,
249A, 260A, 253A, and 254A are placed on the respective angled faces of the third,
fourth, and fifth tier prisms, but it will be understood that in many applications
fibre optic input or output devices may be substituted.
[0050] It will be understood, for instance,that various paths may be set up through the
structure by appropriate activation of the electric fields between the several transparent
electrode pairs as taught herein. For example, unpolarized light having both perpendicular
and parallel components entering input guide 200 follows the indicated separate paths
of Figure 12 to absorber or output 260A when V<1V on all electrode pairs in that path.
Such light entering guide 201 would be directed to absorber or output 253A in the
unaddressed V = 0 condition on all electrodes. Further, light entering port 202 with
V<V
t anywhere would propagate to absorber or output 254A. For crossbar switching, selective
operation of the appropriate switches 199E or 217E or 243E causes all of the light
entering port 201, for example, to flow to any of the three opposite ports 202a, 214,
219. By similar addressing, unpolarized fibre light entering ports 200 and 202 can
be sent totally to those same output ports simultaneously in one-to-one mapping. In
other words, a primary application of the Figure 12 device is as a low loss optical
crossbar or network control switch in which three out of nine switches.:

are ON at any one time, the remainder being OFF; that is, one switch in each row and
each column of the matrix is addressed, which gives one of the six possible optical
interconnections of the fibres 200, 201, 202 with fibres 202a, 214, 219 and which
represents an N-fold pairing.